Strider, didn't you say a homeowner could appeal a turn down by HPC to the City Council? Except that would cost an additional $800 and with no guarantee? So that means you are waiting maybe 2-3 months, and are out $1100, before you even know if you can afford to re-roof the house or not.
When we purchased our current home in 2006, the owner had a lot of deferred maintenance due to her modest means. There was a hole in the roof. She was trying to mitigate damage by putting a plastic tub in the back bedroom, and nailing a tarp to the ceiling to direct the rainwater into the tub. The week after we closed, I had a roofer on top replacing the roof. What if I had to wait two months? What kind of damage could have been caused?
If this house had a tin shingle roof like the one next door and the one across the street, and if I'd had to allocate $40,000 of my $100,000 rehab budget instead of $10,000, then I would have chosen a different house and this (magnificent if I do say so myself) house would probably have been demolished, because the porch was also collapsing and there was a Special Master hearing set up for it.
Just saying. I am all about preservation. And yes, tin shingles are amazing if you can afford them. (And don't let anyone tell you it's because you couldn't get shingles before. They were hard to find and very costly. Well, they are easier to find now, but still 2-4 times more costly in materials and labor.)
So do we lose a house because someone willing to take it on can't afford them? Or do we continue to apply some common sense, as we have done in the past? We have a policy that has been working for some time. Leave it alone. Really, people, this is a no brainer. Let's not make it harder and more expensive to rehab a house in Springfield just as the market is picking up.